Events for Fall 2006:

Date Speaker(s) Title(s) Abstract
Sept. 13 Jessica Sidman, MHC
Seeking Problem Solving Enthusiasts!
Fun problems and shameless advertising for the weekly  problem-solving seminar.  Contact Jessica Sidman if you'd like to join.
The Department of Mathematics and Statistics is seeking students
interested in participating in weekly problem-solving strategy sessions.
Students who wish to take "the Putnam" may find these problem-solving sessions especially helpful, but these sessions are for all students who want to attend.  Pizza and beverages served at noon in 416 Clapp.  Talk 12:20-1:00 pm.
Sept. 20
Student panel
"What I Did on My Summer Vacation" Everything you ever wanted to know about summer experiences (research and internships) by a panel of experts.  MHC math/stat majors who participated in summer research programs and internships in summer 2005 will describe their experiences, including how they found their opportunities and what preparation they required.  Find out how you can find a good summer opportunity to use and expand your mathematics and/or statistics background.
Sept. 20 4pm Smith
Xiao-Li Meng, Statistics, Harvard
"The full Monte Carlo: a live performance"
4:00pm, McConnell 103 (Clark Science Center),
refreshments at 3:45pm.
Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods, originating in comput- tational physics about half a century ago, have seen an enormous range of applications in quantitative scientific investi-gations. This is mainly due to their ability to simulate from very complex distributions such as the ones needed in realistic statistical models. This talk provides an introductory tutorial of the two most frequently used MCMC algorithms: the Gibbs sampler and the Metropolis-Hastings
algorithm. Using simple yet non-trivial examples, we demonstrate, via live performance, the good, bad, and ugly implementations. Along the way, we also reveal the secret behind the greatest statistical magic.
Sept. 27
George Cobb, MHC
"Global warming, data compression, and the
hockey stick controversy"
TBA
Pizza and beverages served at noon in 416 Clapp.  Talk 12:20-1:00 pm.
Sept 27
4:30 pm
Amh. C.
Harold Boas, Texas A&M

"Everything you know (about converging power series) is wrong"
Connecticut Valley Mathematics Colloquium at Amherst College.
Talk at 4:30 in206 Seeley Mudd; refreshments at 4:00  in 208.
Oct. 4 Department faculty
So, you want to go to grad school?
 Math and stat majors have many options for graduate study: mathematics (pure and applied), statistics, allied fields that use mathematics and statistics, professional master’s degrees of various kinds.  How should you prepare yourself with coursework?  With outside the classroom experiences?  What is required for an application?  Department faculty, led by Giuliana Davidoff, will discuss the answers to these questions.   Pizza and beverages will be served.
Oct 10
7pm, CDC

info session
Math for America and the Newton Fellowship
Come learn more about the Newton Fellowship and how you can become a part of a rewarding, supportive and unique teaching program in New York City.  More information is at their website  Math for America

Oct. 11
Weiwen Miao, Macalester and MHC
The Use of Statistics in the Legal System
A lot of standard statistical procedures require that the underlying distribution follows a bell-shaped normal curve. If the data do not meet this assumption, the results often are not valid, and the outcome of the trial might be totally different. This problem occurred in a security law case in which I was one of the statistical consultants of the law firm. For the same data set, different methods (one assumes normality, and the other doesn’t.) gave completely different results.

The talk concentrates on the commonly used graphic method to check normality -- the quantile-quantile plot. (QQ plot) and its robust modification -- RQQ plot. Applying the QQ plot and RQQ plot to data sets arising from two actual law cases: the security law case that motivated the research and a drug smuggling case, I’ll show that the RQQ plot provides a better indication of non-normality.  No experience with statistics is required -- all are welcome.

Oct. 18
Pamela Matheson PhD,
Research Specialist  GCC
Will my baby be infected with HIV?
Risk profiles for HIV+ pregnant women: contributing factors in mother-to-child transmission
Using data from the largest prospectively followed cohort of HIV+ pregnant women, Dr. Matheson will discuss the interrelationships among maternal and delivery factors and how maternal risk profiles were created.  In order to identify subgroups of women at risk for transmitting HIV to their fetus, recursive partitioning (RP) analysis, a simpler and alternative to multiple logistic regression was conducted.  Distinct subpopulations were identified and specific characteristics were associated with differential risk for transmission; ranging from as low as 2% to as high as 70%.  The resulting classification trees assist in hypothesizing the underlying mechanisms and interactions of risk factors for mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1.  Knowledge of combinations of factors associated with high risk play an important role in creating appropriately targeted interventions. 
Oct. 25
Mufaro Kanyangarara '07
MHC
How to Design  a Survey for
Epidemiological Research

Increasing services for babies exposed to HIV/AIDS can be challenging in developing countries due to the stigma associated with such HIV/AIDS services. Several countries have sought to combine basic medical care for HIV-exposed infants with regular immunization schedules to improve survival of HIV-exposed infants. Implementation of such a program requires enhancing the immunization teams with training on HIV follow-up, adding more counselors, and adding drugs for opportunistic infections.
Before such an integrated program can be implemented on a national level, several questions need to be addressed:
-Does integration of HIV and immunization services increase the rate at which HIV-exposed infants receive appropriate follow-up care?
-Does integration of HIV and immunization services change vaccine coveragerates?
-Does integration of HIV and immunization services result in women avoiding immunization service points out of fear of HIV stigma or unwanted HIV-related discussions?
These questions can be answered by carrying out vaccine coverage surveys in an “implementation” district and a “control” district. Results can be used to guide proposal planning for expansion to a national level, as well as to lobby for additional funds needed to support expansion.
In my talk, I will discuss how such a survey can be designed.

Oct 26
7:30 pm
UMass
Robert Moses, Algebra Project
Feinberg Lecture in the series
"Politics and Protest: the 1960s and Now"
Robert Moses is a prominent civil rights activist and founder of the Algebra Project, which "assists students in inner city and rural areas to achieve mathematics literacy  ... skills necessary for entry into  the economic mainstream." (http://www.algebra.org).  He's speaking at 7:30 p.m. at Mahar Auditorium at UMass.
Nov. 1
Deptartment faculty
Information session on 300-level courses, spring 2007
Come learn about 300-level courses in mathematics and statistics for spring 2007, including both MHC courses and offerings in the Valley.
Nov 8
John Wettlaufer, Yale University
Phase Transitions, Ocean Freezing and Climate Catastrophes: Melting below Zero
The surface of ice exhibits the swath of phase transition phenomena common to all materials and as such it acts as an ideal test bed of both theory and experiment.  It is readily available, transparent, optically bifrefringent and probing it in the laboratory does not require cryogenics or ultra high vacuum apparatus.  Systematic study reveals the range of critical phenomena, equilibrium and nonequilibrium phase transitions and, most relevant to this talk, premelting, traditionally studied in more simply bound solids.   While this makes ice as a material appealing from the perspective of the physicist, its ubiquity and importance in the natural environment makes ice compelling to a broad range of disciplines in the earth and planetary sciences.  I describe the physics of the premelting of ice, its relationship with other materials more familiar to the condensed matter community and then we develop a number of the many tendrils of the basic phenomena as they play out on land, in the oceans and throughout the atmosphere.

I am happy then to stay afterwards to answer any questions for students of any level who may be interested in graduate school at Yale in applied mathematics, physics and applied physics, astronomy and the earth and planetary sciences. 

Nov 11
10-5
Holy Cross
Ira Gessel, Ruth Haas, John Little,
Alin Popescu, Seth Sullivant
Discrete Math Day at College of the Holy Cross
One of a series of day-long meetings on combinatorics and discrete math in the northeast.  Contact Harriet Pollatsek or Jessica Sidman if you'd like to attend.
Nov 14
4pm
Smith
Daniel Zelterman, Biostatistics, Yale
"Statistical inference for familial disease clusters through matching"
In many epidemiologic studies, the first indication of an environmental or genetic contribution to the disease is the way in which the diseased cases cluster within the same family units. The concept of clustering is contrasted with incidence. New parametric generalizations of binomial sampling models are described to provide measures of the effect size of the disease clustering. We consider models and an example that takes covariates into account. Ascertainment bias is described and the appropriate sampling distribution is demonstrated.
Nov 15
Kara McMahon '7 & Priscilla Yohuno 09
A Model of Nulear Transport (KMcM) and Unveiling the Mysteries of Amyloid Formation (PY)
Student talks on summer research projects. 
Kara's abstract:
Transportation of cargo between the nucleus and cytoplasm via the nuclear pore complex requires the assistance of multiple transport proteins. This summer at the University of Connecticut Health Center I used the Virtual Cell to model the nuclear transport system. Previous models have assumed that all transport proteins are freely diffusing and available for participation in transport. Recent experimental data, however, shows that a certain percentage of molecules may not be able to participate in these reactions because they are bound to immobile partners. The Virtual Cell model takes into account these immobile binding partners. Steady state concentrations as well as uptake data of cargo into the nucleus were obtained experimentally and from the Virtual Cell model for comparison.
Priscilla’s abstract:
The misfolding of proteins into beta sheets, and the subsequent aggregation of these sheets into fibrous networks underlies many prion and amyloid–related diseases such as the Alzheimers and Mad cow disease. Structural details as well as insight into the mechanism of aggregate stability may reveal vital ways to block the occurrence of these fatal diseases. This talk is a presentation of a molecular dynamics study of how aggregate structure and dynamics affects the stability of H1, the most amyloidogenic fragment of the Syrian Hamster Prion Protein and its mutations. The study’s results concur with the experimental data that the B mutation, A117B, is much stable than A117 and is possibly the most stable mutation at the 117 residue position due to its better packing and stacking.

Nov 15
5pm
Fan Chung Graham, UCSD
Random Graphs and Internet Graphs
Connecticut Valley Mathematics Colloquium at Mount Holyoke.
We will discuss some recent developments on random graphs with given expected degree distributions. Such ramdom  graphs can be used to model various very large graphs arising in Internet and telecommunications.  In turn, these "massive graphs" shed insights and lead to new directions for random graph theory. For example, it can be shown that the sizes of connected components depend primarily on the average degree and the second-order average degree under certain mild conditions. Furthermore, the spectra of the adjacency matrices  of some random power law graphs
obey the power law while the spectra of the Laplacian follow the
semi-circle law. We will mention a number of related results and problems that are suggested by various applications of massive graphs.
Tea at 4:30 pm in 416 Clapp.  Talk at 5:00 pm in 305 Kendade.

Nov 29
Christine von Renesse and Mairead Greene,
UMass
What's Fun about Algebra and Geometry?
We will talk about some fun, hands on problems which are easy to think about.   However, some abstract algebra and geometry are needed to fully understand the solutions.  We just want to talk about some math we enjoy!  Talk at 12:20 in 402 Clapp.
Pizza and beverages will be served at noon in 416 Clapp.
Christine and Mairead are grad students in math at UMass . 
Dec. 6
Alan Durfee, MHC
The mathematics of bell-ringing
TBA
Dec 13
Everyone
End-of-term party!
Pizza, beverages AND special goodies.